Related Links: | Articles on crime |
Letters Menu | Archival Menu |
Haroon Rasheid continued to be fed intravenously at the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation (GPHC) yesterday.
He spent the day lying in bed, complained of pains in his throat, looked somewhat restless, and kept longing to return home.
But on remembering that there is no longer the television set in the home to keep him company now that his wife is no longer there, Rasheid seemed to despair even further yesterday afternoon.
"They (bandits) gone wid meh brand new TV, me gold chain, rings and everything," he lamented.
He said that when his wife was taken to hospital after her accident last Saturday, the wedding band she was wearing was handed over to a relative by the hospital security, but that too, along with his pension and television set, was stolen by the bandits who invaded the home early Wednesday morning.
But even though he longs to return home, it is not sure what his future will be in the ensuing months, since the couple had no children, and his wife Amina has been called away just when he needs her most.
Rasheid, a former Georgetown Mayor and City Council employee, now retired, is unable to work or do anything for himself, and his only means of sustenance is his National Insurance Scheme (NIS) pension.
Rasheid said that after suffering a stroke, he was visually impaired, but the experience he had on Wednesday morning took his vision completely.
It's a new and debilitating experience he's now grappling to come to terms with.
Rasheid shared his Non Pariel home with his wife Amina until the time of her death in an accident on the Melanie Damishana road last Saturday.
She was crossing the road when she was hit by a passing motorcycle and was pronounced dead on arrival at the GPHC.
Kind-hearted neighbours have been visiting Rasheid in hospital and keeping the home now that he is hospitalised.
His wife was buried Wednesday while he was in hospital.
She was laid to rest, without him being able to bid her goodbye or pay his last respects.
Rasheid was doused with kerosene and set alight when the armed gang struck at Non Pariel, terrorising several villagers.
In the ordeal he was robbed of $400 he had in his pocket, $7,000 he had in the house, and the television set, among other things.
Rasheid who had been having a difficult time trying to come to terms with the death of his wife of several years, was sitting in a very pensive mood on a chair under his house where the wake was being kept when the intruders struck.
Relatives said the bandits on a rampage in Non Pariel took Rasheid's home by storm.
At that hour there were only a few persons left at the wake, along with the incapacitated widower, and the terrified persons reportedly began running helter skelter, diving for cover.
The bandits, armed with weapons, reportedly called on Rasheid for money and jewellery and when he told them he was just a pensioner and had no money they became outraged.
Some barged upstairs and ransacked the house, taking away the television set and petty cash, among other things.
Others downstairs doused Rasheid with kerosene and set him ablaze.
Even as the clothing on the helpless man began to burn, witnesses said he sat in the chair unable to move because of his stroke.
After the intruders left the home those on the scene put the blaze out and rushed the badly burned Rasheid to hospital.
The entire top portion of his body - from his head down to his seat was burnt.